Best of the best
Source: |
Portland Press-Herald |
Date: |
April 10, 2003 |
Author: |
Stephanie Bouchard |
The Smucker's Stars on Ice show at Cumberland County Civic Center
on Saturday is an example of the dedication of figure skaters to their
sport and their fans.
"If it's not real," says four-time World Champion Kurt Browning,
"people don't want to watch it." Browning, who spoke in a phone
interview from San Antonio, will skate for the Portland audience,
along with some of the world's best skaters.
Indeed, the Stars on Ice show is the real deal. In its 17th year,
the Stars on Ice program originally was conceived by Olympic Champion
Scott Hamilton and has a powerhouse cast.
There are several Olympic champions: Russian Alexei Yagudin,
Canadians Jamie Sale and David Pelletier, Russians Elena Berezhnaya
and Anton Sikharulidze, and German Katarina Witt.
Also appearing: six-time U.S. National Champion Todd Eldredge,
three-time U.S. National Pair Champions Jenni Meno and Todd Sand, and
two-time U.S. National Dance Champions Renee Roca and Gorsha Sur.
Browning, who has been skating with Stars on Ice for nine years,
says that he would not be the skater he is today if not for his
experiences with the show.
From being a dancing cowboy in one program to something else
entirely in the next, Browning says he and other skaters have "to do
more than your own style of skating." He added that working with some
of the top skaters in the world raises the bar on his own skating.
"These people [other skaters]," he says, "are pulling you along -
making you better."
There aren't many who would argue that Browning needs
improvement. In addition to being a four-time World Champion,
Browning, a Canadian, holds numerous professional and Canadian
championship titles and is listed in the Guinness Book of World
Records for performing the first successfully completed quadruple jump
in a world competition during the 1988 World Championship in Budapest.
Browning is not only known for his athleticism. He's also a top
performer. His programs vary widely but are certainly not often the
typical for a figure skating program. Case in point: his sexy number
set to The Commodores' "Brick House." This year he performs two
provocative numbers on the tour. One is set to Tony Bennett's version
of "How Do You Keep the Music Playing," and the other, comedic, is
performed to James Cotton's "Slippery Side Up."
Saturday's program also includes a powerful performance by two
pairs who were rivals at the Olympics in 2002: Sale and Pelletier, and
Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze, who were at the center of a Salt Lake
City judging scandal.
In an effort to show skater solidarity, the two pairs perform
together as the last performance of the first act.
In a different sort of solidarity, Paul Wylie, a 1992 Olympic
Champion, announced the creation of the World Skating Federation on
March 25. Browning, a supporting member of the organization, says it
was formed by some skaters who have been "disgruntled about how
skating is run."
Browning says that skaters are just trying to find a place where
they can skate with integrity.
Although some disgruntled skaters are forming groups to gain some
control over figure skating ethics, Browning laments that fans "are
starting to give up on it (the figure skating industry)."
Browning says that attendance across the United States at the Stars
on Ice shows hasn't been booming. Adding to fans' concerns about the
skating industry are worries about the economy and the war, he
says. Also a factor in fans' lessened interest in attending Stars on
Ice shows, he says, is Hamilton's retirement from touring.
"People believed in Scott (Hamilton) so much," says Browning, "that
when he wasn't in the show, they felt it stopped." While Hamilton did
retire from touring full time in 2001, he still makes surprise
appearances at various shows, and he co-produces the tour.
Roberta Wright, director of marketing and public relations at the
Civic Center, says that sales for the Stars on Ice show are going well
but that a sellout before the night of the show is not expected.
|